160 



GLEANINGS IN BEE CULTURE. 



Feb. 15 



The Bee-keepers' Review for 

 Feb. has Mr. Gill's second article, 

 giving his plans and methods of 

 managing 700 colonies for comb 

 honey. He goes over the details 

 of preparation, explaining short 

 cuts in putting together sections, 

 cutting up and putting in founda- 

 tion, etc., showing how his wife is 

 able, by these methods, to put to- 

 gether, in eight hours, and fill 

 with foundation, enough sections 

 to fill 100 supers ! 



C. A. Olmstead, a new writer from New 

 York, shows hows the longevity of bees may 

 be increased two weeks, in the working sea- 

 son, by having the larvae nursed by the 

 right kind of laees. 



There are other articles equally interest- 

 ing and instructive, and several pages of 

 short editorials on a variety of topics, but 

 there isn't room for further description; 

 send ten cents for this issue, and with it 

 will be sent two other late, but different, 

 issues, and the ten cents may apply on any 

 subscription sent in during the year. A 

 coupon will be sent entitling the holder to 

 the Review one j'ear for only 90 cts. 



W. Z. Hutchinson, Flint, Mich. 



10 CENTS 



That's all it costs to get acquainted with the 



Rocky Mountain 

 Bee Journal. 



We want to send it on trial to every 

 reader of Gleanings Three Months for 

 10 cts. This vigorous young month- 

 ly has just entered its second year on 

 a paying basis, and has become the 

 recognized mouthpiece of the bee- 

 keepers of the great Rocky Mountain 

 alfalfa regions. Address 



The Rocky Mountain Bee Journal, 



Box 611. Boulder. Colorado. 



AMERICAN 



Ten sample copies, 

 separate issues, 10 

 cts. Published at 



GARDENING, 126 Liberty St., N. T. 



Listen, Bee-keepers! 



The Lone Star Apiarist 



A new bee-journal in the great South- 

 west, the Texas bee-keepers' paradise. 



It will tell you of more glorious fields in the counties 

 south of Uvalde, superior to and more abundant in 

 honey-yielding flora, promising to be one of the great- 

 est honey-producing sections in the world. With flow- 

 ing wells, and the planting of fields of alfalfa in addi- 

 tion to the tine natural re.sources there already. Its 

 editor will tell about his extended trip through this 

 wonderful land. 



Subscribe now, $1 a year. T\\s. Apiarist is 

 not only for the South, but for all America 

 and foreign countries too. Our company has 

 purchased the Southland Queen, and now 

 we have the only bee-journal in the South. 



THE LONE STAR APIARIST PUB. CO.. 

 Louis Scholl. Editor. Floresviile. Texas, 



California. 



The State that produces car- 

 loads of honey ; the largest aver- 

 ages of any State in the Union; 

 a mammoth honey association to 

 market the crop; the value of dif- 

 ferent fields, is told in the 



Pacific Bee Journal, 



Los Angeles, Calif., 



whose correspondents are success- 

 ful producers of tons and tons — 

 20 to So tons each. 



California as a Honey State, by A. J. 

 Cook. Gallup's Bee-keeping Experiences. 

 Nevada Forging Ahead. Utah Bee-keep- 

 ing. Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and 

 Arizona News. Bee-keepers say the Pacific 

 is one of the best Si. 00 bee-papers, prettily 

 gotten up and illustrated; most appropriate 

 cover design. 



Clubbed with Gleanings, new or renewal, $1.00 a 

 year. Grand club with Gleanings and Rocky Mount- 

 ain Bee Journal. $1 25 a year. 



The Pacific Bee Journal, Los Angeles, Calif. 



237 East Fourth Street, 



Do You Read the Modern Farmer? 



If not, why not? Perhaps you have never 

 seen a copy. If not, send for one now — it's 

 free. Send us lo cents and tlie names and 

 addresses of five farmers and we will si nd 

 you the paper one year. Clttbbed with this 

 paper. Write for price. Address 



MODERN FARMER, = St. Joseph, Missouri. 



To make cows pav, use Sharple-S Cream Separators. 

 Book " Business Dairying " & cat. 288 free. W. Chester. Pa. 



